Clinton Campaign Manager, Podesta Regrets Not Securing UFO Disclosure

Maybe I am
just too critical but, if you know that the UFO phenomena is real and you have
an opportunity to expose the truth to the people of the world that should not
be listed as a regret.

That is a monumental, catastrophic failure.

I will stack
Podesta's comment right up there with a failed life. On top of that Podesta
says it was his biggest failure in 2014..........is he actually saying he has
had bigger failures?

It only confirms that politicians are more
interested in their own careers than they are in mankind.

Richard

John Podesta with Obama

Outgoing
senior Obama adviser John Podesta reflected on his latest White House stint
Friday, listing his favorite moments and biggest regrets from the past year.
Chief among them: depriving the American people of the truth about UFOs.

Podesta’s longtime fascination with
UFOs is well-documented, as his brief political hiatus following four years as
President Bill Clinton’s chief of staff freed him up to pursue his otherworldly
passion.

At a 2002 press conference organized by the Coalition for Freedom of
Information, Podesta spoke on the importance of disclosing government UFO
investigations to the public.

“It’s time to find out what the truth really is that’s out there,” he said. “We
ought to do it, really, because it’s right. We ought to do it, quite frankly,
because the American people can handle the truth. And we ought to do it because
it’s the law.”

Following Podesta’s tweet, Friday, the Washington Post recalled
an exchange one of its reporters had with Podesta in 2007. Karen Tumulty had
asked Podesta about reports that
the Clinton Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, had been bombarded with Freedom
of Information Act Requests specifically seeking email correspondence to and
from the former chief of staff including terms like “X-Files” and “Area 51.”
Podesta’s response, through a spokesperson, was “The truth is out there,” the
tagline for the TV show “The X-Files” of which Podesta was known to be a fan.

A 2010 editorial in Missouri’s Columbia Tribune disparaged
reports that Podesta had asked an outspoken UFO photographer to stop discussing
his knowledge of extraterrestrial activities in public.

“One wonders why Podesta would do such
a radical reversal, given his former plea for UFO disclosure,” the editorial
implored.

Unfortunately, Podesta will likely have little time to fill out FOIA requests
in his new job at Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. Perhaps, as his
tweet suggests, he’s passing the torch to New York Times columnist Maureen
Dowd.